In March of 2020, Leo was a logistics coordinator for a mid-sized shipping company. When the world locked down, his office didn’t just close—it exploded with chaos. His boss sent a frantic email: “We have 15,000 spreadsheets. Nobody knows where the trucks are. Fix it.”
It starts at absolute zero—no prior experience, no math degree, just a willingness to type along. It ends with you building real applications: from automating Excel reports to scraping websites, from guessing games to data visualizations. In March of 2020, Leo was a logistics
The "2020 Complete Python Bootcamp" wasn't just about for loops or functions. It was the bridge between (too much data, no time) and production (automation, accuracy, confidence). Nobody knows where the trucks are
Leo opened the first video. The instructor, José, didn't start with "Hello, World." He started with a Jupyter Notebook and a sentence that stuck: "Programming is not about knowing syntax; it's about breaking a human problem into machine-sized bites." The "2020 Complete Python Bootcamp" wasn't just about
Leo learned what a variable was. He learned why = is not an equation but an assignment. He typed print("Hello, Leo") and watched the computer obey him for the first time.
His spreadsheets were a mess of city names: "CHI," "Chicago," "Chicgo," "The Windy City." The course had a section on Strings and Methods . Leo learned about .lower() and .strip() . He wrote his first three-line script to standardize 10,000 city entries.
Leo knew Excel. He did not know code. But he had a laptop, a six-pack of cold coffee, and a desperate bookmark to a course he’d bought on a whim a year earlier: "2020 Complete Python Bootcamp: From Zero to Hero."
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